2016
DOI: 10.1080/02680939.2016.1219769
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Micro-neoliberalism in China: public-private interactions at the confluence of mainstream and shadow education

Abstract: With its shift to a market economy gathering speed from the 1990s, the Chinese government embarked on an agenda that brought neoliberal forces into almost all sectors including education. The policies underpinned China's spectacular economic growth, but in education have had consequences that arguably are problematic. Drawing on a mixed-methods study in Shanghai, this paper examines 'micro-neoliberalism' in China's education system, i.e. privatization and marketization at the individual, family and institution… Show more

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Cited by 101 publications
(82 citation statements)
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“…Schools may thus need to adapt to changes occurring outside their boundaries (Andrew, ). For example, in Shanghai's education system, shadow education that represents academic, supplementary or private tutoring, which mimics (‘shadows’, though imperfectly) regular school curricula (Bray, ), turned out to be a component incorporated into educational practices of schools, families and pupils (Zhang & Bray, ). Referring to Australia, Sriprakash et al .…”
Section: Pupils’ Pt Experience and Perception Of School Teachersmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Schools may thus need to adapt to changes occurring outside their boundaries (Andrew, ). For example, in Shanghai's education system, shadow education that represents academic, supplementary or private tutoring, which mimics (‘shadows’, though imperfectly) regular school curricula (Bray, ), turned out to be a component incorporated into educational practices of schools, families and pupils (Zhang & Bray, ). Referring to Australia, Sriprakash et al .…”
Section: Pupils’ Pt Experience and Perception Of School Teachersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Schools may thus need to adapt to changes occurring outside their boundaries (Andrew, 2015). For example, in Shanghai's education system, shadow education that represents academic, supplementary or private tutoring, which mimics ('shadows', though imperfectly) regular school curricula (Bray, 2017), turned out to be a component incorporated into educational practices of schools, families and pupils (Zhang & Bray, 2017). Referring to Australia, 942 A. Addi-Raccah Sriprakash et al (2016) summarised that 'practices of school education are being reconstituted through multiple forms of pedagogic work in sites beyond the classroom, not least the family and the private tutoring industry' (p. 439).…”
Section: Pupils' Pt Experience and Perception Of School Teachersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This backwash may occur in several ways, such as reducing students' interests and energy in school classes, making the teaching in school class of students with and without private tutoring more challenging, distracting teachers who provide private tutoring from their regular duties, and encouraging misconduct among teachers like deliberately withholding content in school class to push students to private tutoring (Bray & Kwo, 2014;Kobakhidze, 2018;Zhang & Bray, 2017). Tutoring-school partnership in admissions, which may distort the officially-advocated procedures, have been another issue of concern (Liu, 2017;Zhang & Bray, 2017;Zhao, 2014). Other negative influences of private tutoring include (but not limited to) the anxieties among parents and students, the social inequality due to unequal probabilities of taking tutoring, and the heavy financial burden on some families.…”
Section: Development Of Private Tutoring In China and Its Negative Immentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, the tutoring market gained momentum, producing a growing number of cram schools (cf. Zhang and Bray, 2016). Both genuine private schools and institutions offering extracurricular classes or other types of training were frequently accompanied by reports and rumors regarding embezzlement of funds and fees, poor teacher qualifications, fraud concerning school diploma, dilapidated buildings, and so on.…”
Section: Private Responses To Uneven Development and Diversification mentioning
confidence: 99%